

Another older example of this idea: https://solar.lowtechmagazine.com/about/the-solar-website/


Another older example of this idea: https://solar.lowtechmagazine.com/about/the-solar-website/


This is a nvidia specific issue to be clear.


Linux support has made some decent strides, particularly with the open source monado / wivrn + xrizer stack (steamvr / alvr still have their issues but are getting better).


WebDAV is probably the easiest for syncing the actual articles. I use some standalone server whose name I can’t recall but there’s a bunch of options.
I also use calibre-web for accessing articles through koreader + opds on a Kobo ereader, although this is a manual process and could probably be refined.
If the jellyfin server is hosted on the same LAN as the Roku you should be able to access it without Tailscale at all using the IP address of the physical server and port number of Jellyfin. I.E don’t use the tailscale IP of the server when accessing from local devices.
I can vouch for the Vader 4. One caveat is that you currently need Steam running to get full functionality but that should be fixed relatively soon.


Think this one needs a bimodal curve with the two peaks representing the “caught up in the hype” average coder and the realistic average coder.


I have a working solution already so unraid isn’t really appealing to me, and as you say, isn’t FOSS. It’s one of the multiple reasons I’ll never switch to Plex, even if some argue it is a superior product to Jellyfin.
But I use NixOS (btw) so it’s fairly low maintenance once it’s setup, and easy to redeploy if things ever go completely sideways due to hardware failures etc


Android based VR headsets will eventually want some level of RT support for games.
Perplexity is okay with more academic topics at the least, albeit pretty shallow (usually isn’t that different to google). There might be a policy not to include encyclopedias, but it would be an improvement over SEO garbage for sure.